- Failure to provide even the minimum standard of healthcare
- Degradation of dignity and violation of religious practice
- Denial of physical activity and contact with the outside world
- Restricted, irregular family visits
- Denial of communication with lawyers during interrogation
- Use of torture methods that violate every humanitarian norm
In the past decade, an average of between 5,000 and 10,000 Palestinians have been held in occupation prisons at any given time, with the figure occasionally reaching close to 11,000 prisoners simultaneously according to data from organizations specialized in tracking the prisoners' file.
Although resistance to foreign occupation is a right guaranteed by international conventions, the occupation describes Palestinian prisoners as "unlawful combatants" or "security prisoners" during their trials — a deliberate effort to deny them the legal and human rights guaranteed by international humanitarian law and human-rights conventions.
Data from the Palestinian Commission of Detainees and Ex-Detainees indicates that the number of Palestinian children arrested since 1967 has reached 50,000 children, some as young as five years old.
Among the Palestinian prisoners held by the occupation, more than 600 are sentenced to so-called "life terms". Each life sentence is set at 99 years, and some prisoners have been sentenced to 40, 50, even 60 consecutive life sentences — meaning they are sentenced to thousands of years in prison.
